TM J W H a U Corli I REBEL GUNS SILENCE GOVERNMENT's FORT

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

TM J W H a U Corli I REBEL GUNS SILENCE GOVERNMENT's FORT ikiU e'l^irt-ia r, f Am aAoa aAsus cacofjgaojt J. Straughan, presldsat of tha Louis A. Richmond has returned Mrs. LeVana Holmss of Mam oOW sBiUd sUta Ms rsosoM for Young Republican dub, has called after a visit in Lowall, Mass., and street and her daughter. Mis. John sssUag tha su ^ p ^ ^ tt# votara. special meeting of the executive Kingston Lake. ainklnson. of Soanidalo, N. T., have NEUDNIN FAVOR Mr. Nalaon callad >Mp The Herald committee tor this evening at - left for a tan daya’ vaeatlan at Bar today to axpraos hla approval o t the '. 4atd Mra. Arthur Benson and o'clock at the office of the Judge of Alexander Lang, managar of the Harbor,, Malao. ouggieation and to propooa that such Maodiar of tha »M U t btsr of Prospect street have Probate, in the Municipal building. drug department at tha J. W. Hale OF OPEN CAMPAIGN a meaUng be bald m Canter Park Bnrsoa o f OIraalatlaM. from a week’s eskcatlon at It is Important that every one be oompany'a otora, and Mro. lAng, . Buainaaa at tha Mancbaatar oflloe on Tuesday, August 25, the day iH m .R .1 .- present will spend their vacation in Burling­ o f the ROUway Expraae agency for after the last day for Sling nomin­ MANCHESTER ~ A CITY OP VILLAGE CHARM ton, Vermont, and la a tour of the tho drat half of the praorat month ating patitlons. and ICrs. C. A . K. Johnson of Manager Charles Kimball of the Green Mountaina. woa throo packogea laaa than the VOL. LV., NO. 273 AdvarOMsg oa Faga ia> (TWELVE PAGES) number Proposes Park Meeting of *T think the Idea la an esceeilent MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, AUGUST 18,1938 Wlnff, Minn^ are vlslUne their Manchester Gas company, and Mra i t paokagaa ohlppad m tha one,*’ said Mr. Nelson. **It Is no more daughter, Mrs, K. B. EMcJtso KimbalL have as their guests at Mra. George Hatch o f Porter corretponiindlng panod of a vaar ago." street has returned after a visit in than fair to tha votara. I can see ffiu r^ street, wife of Rev. K. B. their home, 106 Russell street, Mr. In moneyly VMUea and mtaka Um no reason wpy any candidate' who TAXI BIDE TO TEXAS ' KteksoB of the Hlmanuel Isitheran Kimball's brother, Lawrence, his Richmond, Va., with her slater, Mra. amount waa Just about tha aama. Prnnary Candidates On Edward R. Edwarda, the former thmifs.he ia antlUed to election to OOSTi'VBTS JUST 8260 : Ittiurch. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel wife and their small son, Charles a public offlea shouldn’t be wtUlng REFORM PARTY Warship’s Guns Wreck Algeciras i-^nnqoist o f LaOrange, □!., and their Warren, of Manchester, N. H. Mlsa Eva Blrge o f thia town, Mra. Prosecuting Attorney William J. Hatch and her aister, Mrs. George Day After Filings Gose. to get up on the bandstand and M l m u a s Y l Washington, Aug. 18.—(AP) JCMldren, Paul and Lola, are also Shea and family are this weak tak­ the iieople why he thinks lo. I cer­ -eTaxi Driver Ray Rose was MWtIng Rev. and Mrs. Erickson for Moore of Oreenfleld, Maas., were ing a Vacation. WhUa r. Sbaa Is i Miss Florence Donohue of Pearl tainly am willing to.” back home today from a 1260 REBEL GUNS SILENCE called there by the lUneaa of their g^ ew days. away ebongea are b «n g made m hia m O R lO U S IN street will sell this evening on the brother-in-law, Mr. Edwards, who Samuel Nelson, Jr., who has filed Tha nrlmarlas are to be held on run which took him and hia cab S. S. Chattanooga from New York office m the Keith bdiltUng, Mr. September 8. died soon after they reached his Shea has taken another room and for the Republican nomination for to Sui Antonio, Texas. Bp- Town Clerk Samuel J. Turkington to Savannah, Ga. At Atlanta she farm near Richmond, and they re­ "They sure didn't get much changes m the suit are now bemg tax collector, today declared his wU- llatt Saturday for Kingston, Ontario, will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. mained until after the funeral. Be­ QUEBEgOTING good out of the scenery,” said bring back Mrs. Turkington who Stephen C. Hale, formerly of Man­ made by John T. Hayes, local con­ sides Mrs. EMwarda be leaves two tractor. Ungnesa to follow the suggestion Roae of hia two "fares,” Ser- underwent an operation for appen­ chester. made In an editorial In thla news­ GOVERNMENT’S FORT daughters, Mlsa Doris and Mias geemts Dennis O’Brien and Wil­ dicitis in a Kingston hospital sev­ Cynthia Edwards. paper on Saturday that candidates Given All Day Tuesday eral weeks ago-while they were va­ The Daughters of Pocohontas wlU liam Harney, who with their The store now occupied by the for elective offices Join m an open Liberals* Role of 39 Years pockets full bonus money cationing. During the ahsence of meet at Tinker Hall tonight at 8 meeting of the townspeople at Great Atlantic and Paciflo Tea com­ A buffet chicken supper, for the o'clock. ' Don’t Forget Your hailed him near the Soldiers’ iM town clerk. Miss Hattie Strick- pany In the Cheney building, now beneflt of the Coventry Fragment which each candidate for any local Main Defense of San Sebat* S^d will he In charge of the office, In All Departments Of Broken When Union Na- Home on August 5 and said "to owned by George W. 9m|th, is to be society, wilt be served Wednesday Texas.” Three Planes Ready n h e office will ho closed from 12 vacated. The company baa leased a from 6:30 to 7:30 p. m. at the home Rose said hla “fares” , whom tian and Inm Rendered ° JK>on until 1:30 p. m. during his store further to the south which was of Walter Havens, Coventry. Reser­ HEATING tionale Wins Election; be left in San Antonio, paid all ' rdhbence. formerly occupied by the Enterprise vations may be made with Mrs. Both These Stores market and will, after changes have Havens, telephone 8039, or Mrs. Picture Framing* his reatsurant and hotel biUa For Loyalists ’ Flight Almost Powerless ky Members of the Luther League been made, move t~ that location. Irving Loomis, telephone 8863. ALL W ATS Premier Is Defeated. “and whenever we changed o f the Emanuel Lutheran church Modern PLANT Buy On Tuesday and Build Up Your Stamp clothes we threw the old ones who plan to attend the scavenger away and bought new ones.” Shirley Cervlnl of 216 Oak street Mrs. Myra Oallnat of Keeney And Always Madrid, (Via Gibraltar, Uncen-.^ The crucial moment. It is believed. Shefls from Warship —• -hunt tomorrow night are asked to has returned home after spending street is spending the week with " Styles Is It In Perfect (Condition Quebec. Aug. 18.— (API—The Lib- -meet at the church at 7 o’clock. No matter how 3rou look at it Book. sored)—Leaders ot the Spanish So­ wlU come within the next 10 daya. three weeks at St. Mary's camp in the family of her son, Lester, m cialist government, fearing fall of The bunt will be made by automo­ Waterbury, you’U always be satlsfled with our To Fw The Winter? ' Party’s 39-year domination of The government leadera were Battles Rage On Wide Putnam. shoe repairing m price and qual­ the oapltal, were reliably reported bile. The destination wll be uebec’s Legislature was ended to­ atated on reliable authority to be nearby lake where refreshments will ity. Preserve today to be holding three alrUnera Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leary of 66 East Central Pomona Orange will day with victory for the Union Na- SOIL EXPERTS in r^lnesa to speed their flight at holding the airliners at Baraja Air­ Fronts With Confficting be served. Miss Grace Johnson Florence street left today for a ten- hold an all-day picnic at TollanJ Old tlonale Party—a coalition of dissat- moment's notice. drome; Rebel air raiders tried un- and the' decorating committee are day stay at Block Island. Grange hall and grounds, Wednes­ Buc(wasfully to destroy the machines in charge of the affair. Memories Dial 5092 Tite JW.IUU CORP. tsfled Liberals and Conservatives. Insurgenta In the Ouadarrama day. A basket lunch will be taken Clanns of Victory. Sam Yulyes anchistir ohh Campaigning on a platform of SCAN EFFECTS mountains north of Madrid are firm­ but succeeded in blowing up four Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Donahue and by Grangers attending. There will , M C - ly eatabUshed and have only to truckloads of ammunition. David Wyman Kelsey of Moun­ SHOE REFAIRINO SERVICB For Free Inspection! *Taform” and a demand for mvestl' their daughters, Margaret, Ann and be a program of sports in the after­ Johnson Paint Co. await relnforcementa coming from The practlcs of turning off the tain View Dairy farm. Glastonbury, noon. A feature will be a competi­ n tio n o f alleged IrregulariUea be­ Jean, have returned to their home 701 Main S t Johnson Block 099 Mam S t Phone 8854 other aides of the capital before city's electric lights at night as B U lX B T m t Jiut over the Manchester line, was tive floral exhibit It is expected a fore the legislative ptihllc accounts OF SPELL on Adams street after two weeks In opening a forceful attack. precaution against air raids has been the Rebel Pbroaa at alacted president of the David P.
Recommended publications
  • Heavyweight Champion Jack Johnson: His Omaha Image, a Public Reaction Study
    Nebraska History posts materials online for your personal use. Please remember that the contents of Nebraska History are copyrighted by the Nebraska State Historical Society (except for materials credited to other institutions). The NSHS retains its copyrights even to materials it posts on the web. For permission to re-use materials or for photo ordering information, please see: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/magazine/permission.htm Nebraska State Historical Society members receive four issues of Nebraska History and four issues of Nebraska History News annually. For membership information, see: http://nebraskahistory.org/admin/members/index.htm Article Title: Heavyweight Champion Jack Johnson: His Omaha Image, A Public Reaction Study Full Citation: Randy Roberts, “Heavyweight Champion Jack Johnson: His Omaha Image, A Public Reaction Study,” Nebraska History 57 (1976): 226-241 URL of article: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/NH1976 Jack_Johnson.pdf Date: 11/17/2010 Article Summary: Jack Johnson, the first black heavyweight boxing champion, played an important role in 20th century America, both as a sports figure and as a pawn in race relations. This article seeks to “correct” his popular image by presenting Omaha’s public response to his public and private life as reflected in the press. Cataloging Information: Names: Eldridge Cleaver, Muhammad Ali, Joe Louise, Adolph Hitler, Franklin D Roosevelt, Budd Schulberg, Jack Johnson, Stanley Ketchel, George Little, James Jeffries, Tex Rickard, John Lardner, William
    [Show full text]
  • Harry Wills and the Image of the Black Boxer from Jack Johnson to Joe Louis
    Harry Wills and the Image of the Black Boxer from Jack Johnson to Joe Louis B r i a n D . B u n k 1- Department o f History University o f Massachusetts, Amherst The African-American press created images o f Harry Will: that were intended to restore the image o f the black boxer afterfack fohnson and to use these positive representations as effective tools in the fight against inequality. Newspapers high­ lighted Wills’s moral character in contrast to Johnsons questionable reputation. Articles, editorials, and cartoons presented Wills as a representative o f all Ameri­ cans regardless o f race and appealed to notions o f sportsmanship based on equal opportunity in support o f the fighter's efforts to gain a chance at the title. The representations also characterized Wills as a race man whose struggle against boxings color line was connected to the larger challengesfacing all African Ameri­ cans. The linking o f a sportsfigure to the broader cause o f civil rights would only intensify during the 1930s as figures such as Joe Louis became even more effec­ tive weapons in the fight against Jim Crow segregation. T h e author is grateful to Jennifer Fronc, John Higginson, and Christopher Rivers for their thoughtful comments on various drafts of this essay. He also wishes to thank Steven A. Riess, Lew Erenberg, and Jerry Gems who contribu:ed to a North American Society for Sport History (NASSH) conference panel where much of this material was first presented. Correspondence to [email protected]. I n W HAT WAS PROBABLY T H E M O ST IMPORTANT mixed race heavyweight bout since Jim Jeffries met Jack Johnson, Luis Firpo and Harry Wills fought on September 11, 1924, at Boyle s Thirty Acres in Jersey City, New Jersey.
    [Show full text]
  • Chesterfield Put This Down Ac, Has Remained America’S Fastest'growing Cigarette; Over Two Billion Are Smoked Per Month
    1---N /---- hililren. The unpn>tt ,d niovii Yukon Dell Yt. r.lierjfr, Alaska’s Tuner; irojector was in tin- middle of Hi* Hospital Ship now in .Juneau Phono .Juneau Music 49 ARE KILLED mil with inflanmiahU Him in uric Ready to Be Laid Up House or Hote l (last menu. —atlv. ) FAMOUS BATTLES ill a table. A caudle was hurtling ♦ ♦ ♦ WE WANT YOU TO KNOW I mil two lllms cauclil !:r< limn il TANW'A. Alaska, Sept. 7 Use the Classifieds. They pay. THAT WE SELL AND THEATRE FIRE rhere was a stillm then l In pn\eminent hospital lmat iMartlia \n for the :: ———-?!;:I trowd rushed fur llic ime dim ip line lias arrived here and wii INSTALL await orders ns to whether ii wii I I UMKRK’K, Ireland. Sept. 7- Forty ■ eo into winter hero or HEAVYWEIGHT TITLE nine prisons are reported to have quarters make other trips hefore the rive, ARCOLA -O- been killed and 10 injured in a fire in an movie theater. An SCHEDULE*FOR freeze-up. improvised By The Associated Press HEATING SYSTEMS unscreened projecting a p p a r a Mi s caught afire. One door, the onh Hauled exit, became jammed and many per- COAST LEAGUE (Garbage by J. J. WOODARD CO. Jim Jefferies knocked out Hob die (iraney, the referee, was all j sons were trampled to death and Month or Plumbing—Sheet Metal Work Fitzsimmons July 25, 11102, in the dressed up in the "conventional Opening Ibis afternoon, the clubs Trip j burned. Twenty nine bodies recov- General ; South Front Street eighth round of a bout in a vacant evening dress." if the Pacific Coast League will Contracting, Concrete ered are unrecognizable.
    [Show full text]
  • The Panama Cannonball's Transnational Ties: Migrants, Sport
    PUTNAM: THE PANAMA CANNONBALL’S TRANSNATIONAL TIES The Panama Cannonball’s Transnational Ties: Migrants, Sport, and Belonging in the Interwar Greater Caribbean LARA PUTNAM† Department of History University of Pittsburgh The interwar years saw the creation of a circum-Caribbean migratory sphere, linking British colonial sending societies like Jamaica and Barbados to receiving societies from Panama to Cuba to the Dominican Republic to the United States. The overlapping circulation of migrants and media created transnational social fields within which sport practice and sport fandom helped build face-to-face and imagined communities alike. For the several hundred thousand British Caribbean emigrants and their children who by the late 1920s resided abroad, cricket and boxing were especially central. The study of sport among interwar British Caribbean migrants reveals overlapping transnational ties that created microcultures of sporting excellence. In this mobile and interconnected world, sport became a critical realm for the expression of nested loyalties to parish, to class, to island, to empire, and to the collective they called “Our People,” that is, “the Negro Race,” worldwide. †The author is grateful to Rob Ruck, Theresa Runstedtler, and three anonymous reviewers for the Journal of Sport History for very helpful comments on earlier versions. Correspondence to [email protected]. Fall 2014 401 JOURNAL OF SPORT HISTORY THE PANAMA AMERICAN’S “WEST INDIAN PAGE” in August of 1926 traced a world of sports in motion. There was a challenge from
    [Show full text]
  • Ath001 Chronology of Limerick Athenaeum 2.Pdf
    Introduction The Limerick Athenaeum is comprised of two separate buildings at Upper Cecil Street Limerick. The original building, which now houses the Limerick Vocational Educational Committee [LVEC], was built as the offices of the Commissioners of St. Michael’s Parish in 1833. It was, in effect, the Town Hall of Georgian Limerick. The second building, the Athenaeum Hall was built by the Limerick Athenaeum as a Lecture Theatre in 1855. 1833 MINUTES OF St MICHAEL'S PARISH COMMISSIONERS [Source: From original manuscripts at the Limerick Archives] April 19th 1833: At a meeting of the above, with William White in the Chair, it was resolved that the proposal of John Stokes end Michael Guerin to build the new Parish Offices be accepted, for the sum of'£ 1,070 sterling. The contractors have to expend £300 before they get any money from the Board. Nicholas Hannon is appointed superintendent. Report in the Limerick Chronicle of the 20th April 1833: "The Commissioners of St Michael's Parish, yesterday, agreed with Mr Stokes, architect, for the sum of £1,070 to erect premises for a Watch-House, Board-Room etc in Cecil Street, to be accomplished on the 1st January next". Extracts from the Minute Books of the Commissioners of St. Michael's Parish: Page 2: Creagh & Charles McMahon act as guarantors for contractors. Page l7: Letter from John Stokes re £200 payment for building costs. Page 20: Donel Barrington is agent for Earl of Limerick. John Fogerty is awarded £ 3-10-0 for plans of the new building. Page 24: £100 awarded to the builder.
    [Show full text]
  • Before Jackie Robinson Gerald R
    University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln University of Nebraska Press -- Sample Books and University of Nebraska Press Chapters 2017 Before Jackie Robinson Gerald R. Gems Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples Gems, Gerald R., "Before Jackie Robinson" (2017). University of Nebraska Press -- Sample Books and Chapters. 359. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/359 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University of Nebraska Press at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Nebraska Press -- Sample Books and Chapters by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. BEFORE JACKIE ROBINSON Buy the Book Buy the Book Before Jackie Robinson The Transcendent Role of Black Sporting Pioneers Edited and with an introduction by GERALD R. GEMS University of Nebraska Press LINCOLN & LONDON Buy the Book © 2017 by the Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska Portions of chapter 1 previously appeared in Pellom McDaniels III, The Prince of Jockeys: The Life of Isaac Burns Murphy (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2013). Used with permission. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America Library of Congress Control Number: 2016956312 Set in Minion Pro by Rachel Gould. Buy the Book CONTENTS Introduction . 1 Gerald R. Gems 1. Like a Comet across the Heavens: Isaac Burns Murphy, Horseracing, and the Age of American Exceptionalism . 17 Pellom McDaniels III 2. John M. Shippen Jr.: Testing the Front Nine of American Golf . 41 Sarah Jane Eikleberry 3. When Great Wasn’t Good Enough: Sam Ransom’s Journey from Athlete to Activist .
    [Show full text]
  • Inventory to Archival Boxes in the Motion Picture, Broadcasting, and Recorded Sound Division of the Library of Congress
    INVENTORY TO ARCHIVAL BOXES IN THE MOTION PICTURE, BROADCASTING, AND RECORDED SOUND DIVISION OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Compiled by MBRS Staff (Last Update December 2017) Introduction The following is an inventory of film and television related paper and manuscript materials held by the Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division of the Library of Congress. Our collection of paper materials includes continuities, scripts, tie-in-books, scrapbooks, press releases, newsreel summaries, publicity notebooks, press books, lobby cards, theater programs, production notes, and much more. These items have been acquired through copyright deposit, purchased, or gifted to the division. How to Use this Inventory The inventory is organized by box number with each letter representing a specific box type. The majority of the boxes listed include content information. Please note that over the years, the content of the boxes has been described in different ways and are not consistent. The “card” column used to refer to a set of card catalogs that documented our holdings of particular paper materials: press book, posters, continuity, reviews, and other. The majority of this information has been entered into our Merged Audiovisual Information System (MAVIS) database. Boxes indicating “MAVIS” in the last column have catalog records within the new database. To locate material, use the CTRL-F function to search the document by keyword, title, or format. Paper and manuscript materials are also listed in the MAVIS database. This database is only accessible on-site in the Moving Image Research Center. If you are unable to locate a specific item in this inventory, please contact the reading room.
    [Show full text]
  • Name: Harry Wills Career Record: Click Alias: Black Panther
    Name: Harry Wills Career Record: click Alias: Black Panther Nationality: US American Birthplace: New Orleans, LA Hometown: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Born: 1889-05-15 Died: 1958-12-21 Age at Death: 69 Stance: Orthodox Height: 6′ 2″ Manager: Paddy Mullins Harry Wills was a Heavyweight contender during the late 1910s and 1920s. He was widely seen as Heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey's top contender for much of Dempsey's title reign. Wills was unable to secure a title shot due to the color barrier in boxing, which prevented African-American boxers from fighting for the Heavyweight title, following the controversial reign of Jack Johnson. Harry Wills served as a sparring partner for heavyweight champion Jack Johnson in preparation for Johnson's July 4 1912 title defense against Fireman Jim Flynn. The Kansas City Star reported that in a June 9 sparring session between the two Wills 'did his best, but his best was not much and Johnson called for Marty Cutler after Wills had been on duty for three rounds.' Wills died December 21, 1958 in New York City, NY, USA. Aug. 30, 1922 NY Times article called him the Brown Panther Photo 2; Photo 3 CBZ page Sunday State Journal Lincoln, Nebraska 24 Aug 1924 Methods of Negro Boxer Are Totally Opposite From Wild Bull's Ideas—He Weighs 224. At Harry Wills' camp at Rose Point, a beautiful spot on Peconic Bay, Southampton, L. I., we learned that Wills' training methods are almost totally opposite from Luis Firpo's. Whereas Luis takes his steak and meat daily, Harry's special training dish is cream cheese of his own making.
    [Show full text]
  • By Don Stradley
    PRESENTS CANCELED!By Don Stradley t’s about time to comment on the cancelation of the Gennady Golvkin - Saul Alvarez rematch, a bout that fell through when Alvarez, having failed two tests for the banned substance clenbuterol, decided to make different plans for Cinco De Mayo. Regrettably for Alvarez, he can pass hair follicle tests until he looks like Bennie Briscoe, but the company line that his initial results came from eat- I ing tainted Mexican beef will probably be questioned for the rest of his career. (left to right) Gerry Cooney’s frequent cancelations created a wall of cynism between him and the press. Vinnie Curto preferred the company of celebri- ties like Don Johnson over fighting Marvelous Marvin Hagler., he suspiciously walked away from his 1977 bout with Hagler. Thomas Heans vs. Marvelous Marvin Hagler was supposed to take place in 1982, until Hearns canceled it with a “sprained his pinky.” A suspicious cancelation has a way of altering our perception of a fighter. It’s not on par with quitting in a fight, but it carries its own unique stench that can take years to air out. Generally, it’s a poor public relations move. eavyweight contender Gerry Cooney turned cident didn’t hurt Hearns’ career, but he spent a few years cancelations into an annual event. If it wasn’t hearing murmurs about how he had been afraid of Hagler, a shoulder or a knuckle that needed mend- murmurs that didn’t stop until the two finally fought. H ing, it was a mysterious cut that occurred in A hand injury was behind the canceling of another middle- training.
    [Show full text]
  • Ape Chronicles #035
    For a Man! PLANET OF THE APES 1957 The Three Faces of Eve ARMY ARCHERD WHO IS WHO ? 1957 Peyton Place FILMOGRAPHY 1957 No Down Payment 1958 Teacher's Pet (uncredited) FILMOGRAPHY (AtoZ) 1957 Kiss Them for Me 1963 Under the Yum Yum Tree Compiled by Luiz Saulo Adami 1957 A Hatful of Rain 1964 What a Way to Go! (uncredited) http://www.mcanet.com.br/lostinspace/apes/ 1957 Forty Guns 1966 The Oscar (uncredited) apes.html 1957 The Enemy Below 1968 The Young Runaways (uncredited) [email protected] 1957 An Affair to Remember 1968 Planet of the Apes (uncredited) AUTHOR NOTES 1958 The Roots of Heaven 1968 Wild in the Streets Thanks to Alexandre Negrão Paladini, from 1958 Rally' Round the Flag, Boys! 1970 Beneath the Planet of the Apes Brazil; Terry Hoknes, from Canadá; Jeff 1958 The Young Lions (uncredited) Krueger, from United States of America; 1958 The Long, Hot Summer 1971 Escape from the Planet of the Apes and Philip Madden, from England. 1958 Ten North Frederick 1972 Conquest of the Planet of the Apes 1958 The Fly (uncredited) 1959 Woman Obsessed 1973 Battle for the Planet of the Apes To remind a film, an actor or an actress, a 1959 The Man Who Understood Women (uncredited) musical score, an impact image, it is not so 1959 Journey to the Center of the Earth/Trip 1974 The Outfit difficult for us, spectators of movies or TV. to the Center of the Earth 1976 Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Really difficult is to remind from where else 1959 The Diary of Anne Frank Hollywood we knew this or that professional.
    [Show full text]
  • Jack Dempsey in Tampa: Sports and Boosterism in the 1920S
    Tampa Bay History Volume 14 Issue 2 Article 3 12-1-1992 Jack Dempsey in Tampa: Sports and Boosterism in the 1920s Jack Moore University of South Florida Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/tampabayhistory Recommended Citation Moore, Jack (1992) "Jack Dempsey in Tampa: Sports and Boosterism in the 1920s," Tampa Bay History: Vol. 14 : Iss. 2 , Article 3. Available at: https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/tampabayhistory/vol14/iss2/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Open Access Journals at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Tampa Bay History by an authorized editor of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Moore: Jack Dempsey in Tampa: Sports and Boosterism in the 1920s JACK DEMPSEY IN TAMPA: SPORTS AND BOOSTERISM IN THE 1920s by Jack Moore On Wednesday afternoon February 4, 1926, heavyweight champion of the world William Harrison “Jack” Dempsey fought seven rounds of exhibition matches with four opponents in an outdoor ring specially constructed on the property of real estate developer B.L. Hamner in what is now the Forest Hills section of Tampa. None of the estimated crowd of 10,000 paid a cent to see the famous conqueror of Jess Willard, Georges Carpentier, Luis Angel Firpo (“The Wild Bull of the Pampas”), and Tommy Gibbons demonstrate some of the skills and spectacular personal appeal that had made him one of the era’s greatest sports heroes. With the passage of time Dempsey would become an authentic legend, a sports immortal. Three other legendary sports’ heroes, Harold “Red” Grange, Jim Thorpe, and Babe Ruth also visited Tampa around the time of Dempsey’s appearance.
    [Show full text]
  • International Boxing Research Organization Newsletter #26 September 1987
    International Boxing Research Organization Newsletter #26 September 1987 From: Tim Leone Sorry about being a week late on the last Newsletter, but I broke another copyer and it was necessary to have the copy work done by a printing company. To date there has been a total of 90,000 feet of 8mm and S8mm requested for transfer, about 8,000 feet of 16mm and 58 hours of VHS duplication requested. I'm surprised that Castle Films is no longer in business. Again, I must express gratitude to those members who took time to write and phone their encourgement over the resumption of the Newsletter. The organization is a joint venture involving all of us. Without the support of the membership, none of this would be possible. -- Long Live Boxing -- I am involved in doing research in the pre-1932 years of the career of Tiger Jack Fox. At the moment there are numerous verifications of main event matches between the years of 1925 and 1932 for him. Any additional information would be greatly appreciated. In this Newsletter, Thanks must go to the following gentlemen for their contributions: Tracy Callis, Dave Block, Paul Zabala, Bob Soderman, Lawrence Fielding, John Grasso, John Hibner, and Lucketta Davis. 1 V-1 E I F ID I FzECTOFt "V F" 1J A E NEW MEMBERS Jack Barry 33 Skyline Drive West Haven, CT 06516 Phone (203) 933-6651 Mr. Barry is interested in professional boxing from the bareknuckle era to 1959 in the U.S.A. His specific interests include Fritzie Zivic and Harry Greb.
    [Show full text]